4The Canadian. Stotesman, Bowmanville, Mar. 28, 1973 EDITORUAL COMMENT Fuit Investigation Should Be Launched Early Sunday morning, a car hit a hydro pale on King St. East, slicing it off just above grourid level and drap- pinig it ta' the road. The car was not con-m.pletely wrecked, the driver escaped without being killed, yet the accident triggered a series of events whose cost will run ï-nto mnany thousancis of dol- lars, and disrupted power supply for several hours in a fairly large segment. of the twn. We're suggesting that a complete investigation should be launched of the circunistances. If this pale was so im- portant ta the poWer supply, why was it located within inches of the highway surface, on a curve wheré' many acci- dents have occurred? What in this wcrld of fuses and breakers i±, work and why? And, if the break in the water main outside the f ire hall had, any thing ta do with the accident and subsequent lack of power, what, protection is there that it won't happen again? And what would have happened if the main hadn't broken? Would the huge water tanfk have overflowed or would it conceiv- ably have blown open, spilling its con- tents on the ground below and possibly have corne down during the proc'ess? Ail of these possibilities make it mandatory ta, fully investigat.e the safe- guards built inta the system, to make certain all are in satisfactory condition to do their job effectively when called upon. Quite frequently events such as these prove-beneficial in the long run, although costly at the tinne, insoin just what can happen when things don't work as they are supposed ta. One of the first moves should be ta niove that pol e or any others in such hazardous spots well back froin the highway, where car drivers will have more difficulty hitting them. We shud- der to think what might have happenedl if the accident had happenied oni a week day, with the weather 20 below zero. The damnages fromn this accident would have been insignificant by comparison. Refeshing Change of' Entertainment On Sturday evening, ini between the several hockey playoffs by aur yauing teamns at the Arena, we had the good fortune ta drap into the Town Hall for thre program of music by Roi- and D'Eon's pupils. Frankly, we had expected ta, hear beginners on the gitar and accordion struggling through numbers that please thieir parents, but otherwise are a bit i rough and ail too often off key. This was different and much better than anticipated. Sa much so, that we were sorry indeed that we could oniy stay through the f irst few numbers. The f act that it didn't start until haîf an hour after the scheduled time didn't help aur, timetable either. We were truly amazed at the poise and confidence these youngsters have developed in a short time on their in- struments and delighted withtheir per- formnances. It was a welcome change fromn watching' young players trying to, beit each other out of'the rink while A K"illing in If you mrissed out on the recent killings in gold speculatian, don't give Up hope; moaybe there's a small fortune in glass tucked away at hame. That's right: Glass. Sof t-drinký bot- tiýers have increasedthe deposit you pay an smrall1 returnable botties by 150 per cent - from two cents ta five cents. Large returnable botties are now worth 10 cents, douï-ble what you paid for them Bottiers are doing this because they want thleir bottlesbck The botties cost the camp')anies miore than the dleposits, bl u t 0ta20-per cent ci'reffllable lotties arýen't ,returned. l-igher deposits have also been sug- their sapporters scream aobscenities at those 'dunomies' doing the officiating and thase 8-14-year-old thugs an the opposing team who are de!ib-erately try- ing ta murder their players. 'In fact, we were so impressed by the mu.ýsical treat that xe took time on SSunday afternoon ta attend samne of Uncle Benny Wiison's Jamboree, also in the Town Hall and alang with the enthusiastic crowd, had a great time. Sa, for those who wvant a change of pace and some comnparative ealm and peace after bailing over at the hockey gamnes, go see and hear somne of these other ,major events going an in tawn. Thiey are entertaining and not sa hard on the blood pressure. On Sunday, April l5th, the genial Senator Jim Cayle and his entertainers wili be holding forth at the Town Hall. We'll have to drop oven and hear them toa., This weekend it'll be the New- castle Skating Club Carnivai either Sat- urday night or Sunday afternoon. Pop Botties gested as a way ta dlean the c-ountry- side of discarded botties. As Alberta cîtizens discovered when. refu)nds be- came mandatory in that province on soft-drink, liquor and wine botties, and cans, long-lost botties have a way of turning up when thlere's sufficient in- ventive. One man truclced in $800 worth - 16,000 wine and liquor botties ties, fromn, he said, his xother's garage. It just goes to show battle hoarders that procrastinatian somnetimes does pay off. But don't bet on pop botties, like gald, becamning "a hedge in timre of Inflation." The gnomes of Zurich wouldn't be impnressed eveni if Fort Knox were overflowing with empties. Bloody Murderers Canadian.s have a strange mental- to demand protection on their igh- ity, We demand the ruthless extermin- ways. ation of any living species that inthe St. Marys Journal-Argus Jeast threatens aur persons or posses- sions but do norithing to have our high- MAYBE YOU'D LIKE TO HAVE ways ridded of the m aniacs wha daily THE DUMP kil and mnaimn our families and wreck aur property. Port Hope, Ontario We quickly cali out the law and R.R. 3, LiA 3V orgyanize a posse to kili or capture a March 20, 1973. harmliess bobcat that strays into a back Sir: alley, but we seldomn cast a second I would like to reply to a statement glance at a speeding motorist roaring in your paper made by Mr. Bob through a school zone. Stevens' Fireside Group of Rotarians We endorse t1he irnprisonment of that the landfill dump in Hope anyone- who brandîshes a firearm, but Township would probably be more of7 pay small attention to the wild andan-st h albity frequently intoxicated friends who huri a se hnalaiiy 4,000 pound mi>ssiles of destruction I would like the people of down our crowded highways. Bowmanville and vicînity ta realize We support the hanging of those that no amount of money can who privately kIl an enemy no matter compensate for the possible pollution how just their cause, but we fail to of two trout streams that originate at raise aur voices to demand adequate this site, in a large area of bush and deterrent for thýe cold blooded murder- ravines; the two marshes through ers who crtiise our highways and cal- which these streams flow. The lously kili and maim ursuspecting in- surrounding farms and residents- use nocent victims. Crîminal conduet on our highways wells and springs for their water is becoming accepted as an unpleasant supply. but unavoidable phase of Canadian if e. This pollution could eventually We demnand the building of safer roads reachi Lake Ontario as the site is only a and the mnanufactureof safer cars, but mile and a haîf from Lake Ontario. we indignantly scream "police state"' at Pollution from a dump has been known the suggestion of ghost cars or con- to travel 23 miles.1 cealed patrolmnen in a feeble effort ' o I have not mentioned the other catch the outlaws of the highways. disadvantages - the rats, the flies, the We protest the infringement of reueboig aotadtese personal rights if police try to obtain reubownig aoutland zthedmeor scientific tests on a drunk's alcoholic Bwavlehsln oe o condition, but we -scarcely give 'a industrial use. Maybe you would like ta' thought ta his victim lying in, the make C.P. Rail an offer. YOU CAN morgue or hoaspitai. HAVE IT - WE DON'T WANT IT! It seemns unlikely that this sorry picture will change soon because there Yours trufly, is no indication that Canadians intend (Mrs. K.) Margery Ashby. Durham County'a Great Family Journal Established 119 years aqo in 1854 Also ncorponating The Bowmanville News Tihe Newcastle Independent The. Orono News Second claa mail rgbstration nuznber 1561 Pradluced every Wednesday by THE IAMES -PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED 62 6;j King St. W., Bowmanville, Onto Phenu 623-3303 1011HV M. JAMES GRO. P. MORRIS PATRICE GOULD DONALD BISHOP EDIToaPUBzaSN'm BUSINEuSMoa. SALES MXWAGI3 PLANT MGR. -Cpyright and/oi property rlqhte subs ut tn th, image cppearing an this prool. Pernisiatnt re.prdce ta inwhoe or la part and ia an for. whatscever. particulariy hy photographic ar offset pracese 10in vpiibliliofl Mut be obtained Irans the pubiiber and the primter. &ny unauthorimed reproduction wifL b.c ubbeat tg recouruet in Iaw." $7.00 a yea - 5 imonths $4.00 $9.00 a Yearli the United. States strktly in advanc. Athouqh every precauttan wfl be takren ta avafd erri rhe Canadian Stateemna accepte advertl5 mg l ifs »àcolumne on the understandinq thal i wW net liefiable toi any erri in cony advertieement pubhzihed fereundei unies$-*aproof af sucli advertisment te requesfad ta wrtnq by the adycifiset and returned ta The Canadizan Stateeman business office duly sîqned by the adverticee and wtb eucb rror ai1 coretions plainly nted in writîng thereon, and tn that case il afly errar so sated te soi cr-eted by Te. Canadian illtoeemn uls iobiity shait net exceed auch a portion 0i the. sobre coet a! sucri aeiet as <te pace occupied by the noted erri beare la the whale op..e occupled b u dvertioe=enL IIn the Editor's Mail Dear Editar: Bawmanviile, Ont., March 18, 1973 According ta your paper, the Board o! Education thinks everything is satis- factony in th e schools since no parent attended their recent meeting. Could 'it not be that the parents know it wauid be a waste o! their time and that their child couid sufer even mare Sa, through reprisal? Just what would you do about ýcam- plaints. Go to the teach- ers o! course, and who is going ta listen to the par- ent an the child,,wha canot defend hirrself. Children are farced into the sehool system at age five with absoiutely no say in thec matter. Dan't they eann the ight to be happy?, Should thîs not be an en- joyable experience rather than a feeling o! being in prison? A chiid's attitude to.ýward schnoal and teacher la anly a reflection ai the teacher's attitude toward the chiid. Ail children are cre- ated equal but not ahl child- ren are born equai and'it appears general knowiedge that anly the students who are quicker. ta hearn, and those froin homes a! "high- cm social standing and money" get the teacher's time and attention while other studentgavae ignored and left on th1eir awn, floundering and frustrated. Some make it, somre can't, Every chlld should pass and every cbiid sbouh d be given the attentionan guidance so he meet.s the require- ments ta do so. The spîrits o! toc, many little children are. mutilated t'hnough the unkind, thoughtless teachers and this is a terrible sin. The class roora is no place ta practice iscrimination. It was not intcndcd as such and therefoýre should flot be tolerated. Teachers must be more o! a friend and less o! a drill sergeant. A gentie Pat on the head, a' few wards o! encouragement and at least an appreciable rec- ognition of their efforts mean so much toa-achild. 1 also feel very strongiy that the Dinetar a! Educa- tion must face up ta the fact that there is a rhyme and there is a reason for aur three hundred and seventy students dropping oui a! the High School. Are the parents not cancemned? Is the taxÉpayer not concern- cd that this costly new sehool must nat be pnoduc- ing what the student wants on needs? Has the, teach- -----S ug------ WIFE SWAPPING? ITS NOT'FOR ME Hereby a few notes of observation, condemnation and celebration. What is there ta celebrate? Why, man, it's Spring. Not oniy by the câlendar, which happens every year, but by the signs, which happen about once a decade. The grass is green! And birds are seen The cat wants out And I've lost my gout The snow is gone 1 can see my lawn No mounds of ice How awfuily nice 1 want ta sing, It must be spring. There. A Canadian who does not celebrate the actual as well as officiai arrivai of the vernal equinox should be run out of the country as a base-born traitor. Each time winter cames around, which it seems ta do about every four months, I think we ail have a little secret dread that this time it might neyer end, fhat winter willgo on and on and on until we have shriveiled into arthritic, gnome-like creatures with permanently 'dripping nases and a perpetual cough. Maybe I'd feel diffe rently if I were a farmer, but-I could have kissed that first crow I saw, drifting over the drifts in February. That much-maigned creature, the crow, is to Canadian winter-haters what the warm breath of a maiden is to a juvenile just before his first kiss. This year, the whole dream see ms real, so crack open that crock of vintage stuff, do a littie soft-shoe shuf fie, and go out and kiss the mud in, your back yard. It may be the last time you can celebrate such' a miracle for the next fifteen Marches. for some condemnation. With the disappearance of the snow, we can see what Nature so gracefully covered for a few months - ail the filth that man has been sweeping under the white carpet. It's a junk-man's paradise: rags, bones and botties. A few companies who appear ta have some sembiance of conscience are announcing plans for recycling of cans and botties but the great majority of canners and bottiers are roling right ahead with their apparent project of covering Canada ta an -Spice By Bihl Smiley a depth of one foot, from coast to coast, with empty cans and non-returnable botties. Congratulations are due to those who are making an effort, and the utmost contempt must be awarded to those who show their contempt for everything except the bucks by defecating their cans and botties in our living room -= Canada. Strangeî sn't it, how governments respond? Let a little guy burn some leaves in his back yard and the law is rîght on his back,. He's broken the by-law, he's a, rotten- polluter, he's a disgrace to the community, and he shail be punished, promptly and ruthlessly. But when it cornes to taking on a big guy, a vast corporation, govern- ment stands by, deploring and wring- ing its hands, and occasionally administering-a slap on the wrist with a velvet glove, in the form of a tiny fine that makes the company's directors roar with laughter before they go happily back to pouring their poisons into the environment. In the matter of bottles, govern- ment could show a lead that would not imperil a single politician, which seem s to be the Canadian Dream. It could insist that liquor and wine botties Je returned for use over and, over agaîn. I'm sure the distillers and vinters wouldn't quarrel with such a practice, as long as it/ didn't cost them. In fact, they'd be ahead. Some of those fancy bottles must cost as much as it does to produce the poison that goes into them. That's my condemnation bit for this week. Now, some observations on these peculiar days in which we live. A couple of big-league American basebaîl pitchers decided, according to, the news, to swap not only wives but families. Then one of them tried to back out. The other was indignant. 'II thought he was my buddy," he wailed. Wife-swapping, particularly in suburbia, is no new, phenomienon. These chaps merely extended the custom. It's one that has neyer, appealed much ta me. There have been occasions, and I know it's mutual, when I would have swapped my wife for a second-hand pair of hip waders. But for another-,,woman? Well, I look around at the wives of ail my men friends. They're lovely girls, the wives, every one of them. However, I'm one of those old-fashiioned chaps who can see littie advantage to deserting thé frying-pan forthe fire. And you know what? lil bet my wife won't understand that' as a compliment. ing staff failed ta produce as is expected ù! them? Since they are employees o! the public, I think we have the right to know wheme the poblemn lies. It wouid seemn apparent that Mn. Thom and aur Board o! Education should investi- gate and camne up with the answers. Go to the drap- out students, nat tbe teacbi- ers. To quate Mn. Kennedy, "~Most o! the students who have stuvk it out this long wiil stay until the end o! the year". Sounds ta me as if he admits that it's a real drag. With the high cost o! education, we have the right to demnand the best for each and every student and the utmost effort from each and eveny teacher. 1 also wonder if we can- not utiiize the aid High Svhool ta an advantage, especialiy since we are stili paying for it. Our "in cam- mands" are/telling us they are going ta build a new schoal for grades seven end eight while at the same time talk is going on about a new schooi in> Wavemiey Gardens. Couldn't a thought be given, towamrd using this big, empty sebool and bus- ing students fmom around the town? In tbis way we could help ta ccntroi ta same degree the ever rising cost o! education. And it oudseem iapparent stu- dents could came ies3s about new, fancy svhools. Thank you for the space, 1 arn, Ruth Pate, 27 Orcbardview Blvd. MORE ON DROPOUTS Bowmanville, Ont., March 20, 1973 Dean Sir: Over 370 Dropauts Sa Far This Year, and the Dimector o! Educatian says, "There appears ta be no rhyme on reason ta it", One ai the greatest educa- tional experiments ever undertaken had its genesis in the GI. Bill a! Rights, which fallowed Wonld War 1. Masses o! Veterans were sent back ta schools and colleges at that time by Government. MKany o! them' bad faiied in school and, accordlng ta schaol records and test results, were iab- eied as failures, Yet today the professions and skllled trades are fiiied with these so-calied "f14ilures". What bappened? They were mati- vated ta learn! They want- ed ta iearn anýd they did. The magie ingredients a!f their success was their de- sire ta succeed. The same holds true for yaungsters in schaol. A pupil suceeds because hei wants ta. I have known yaun.gstens who were labeled "unteach- able" suddenly ta becomne alive and achieve. What happened? The answer -, they were motîvated, either b)y some inner drive or by the clever bandling o! a good teacher. The master teacher is really the mast- er af motivation. Naw for rbyme or reason: (1) These students are nat Dropouts, (bad, word) ,they are Tur!ed out by the 25 YEARS AGO ThuýrSday, April 8, 1948 On April 1, 1948, iMr. A. >M Hardy, consulting Super-' ntendenî,, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, Bow- manville Branch, announe- ed his retirement froi active duties with the Com- pany. The annuai Order af East- ern Star card party wAs 'held at the Lions Centre on Wednesday, Ml a r c, h 319t. Bridge prizes were won by iMrs. Nelson Osborne and Mr. Frank Jamieson, 500 prizes by Mrs. Hamiltan and Mr. Ed. Ruthven, euchre prizes by Mr. D. Alldread and Mr. C. Swallow. The North Oshawa Unit- ed Chrch was officially opened- and dedicated on Sunday. Guest preacher was Rev. J. E., Griffith, Bowmanville. The executive for the Bowmanville Intermediate Bail Club for the 1948 seas- on is as foliows, Honorary Pres., Charles Cattran-. Pres. AI Osborne, Vice-Pres.,Mei-, boumne Wight; Se'y-Treas., Nelson Osborne: Business Manager, Jim Crombie; Di- rectors Bob Kent. J. J. Brown, Mac Moore, Andy Thompson, Dr. Wm. Ten- nant and Dr. Keith Siemon. The Tuiip Time Dance by Club 15 was a huge success with good time, good mugie ~and good -food combining-to-- mnake ît one of the best dances of the season. Priz- were won by Fay Fry and Stew Ferguson,ý Mr. and Mrs. James Barclay for. lucky spot dances; Mr. and Mrs. Walt Dixon won a prize donated by Mr. James Marr; Mrs. Stuart Crago won the lucky dance pro- gram prize. ,The April meeting of Trinity W.M.S. was beldi in the S. S. Roomn on Tuesday. Mrs. A. S. Baker read a let- ter from Japan, thanking the society for box of food sent. Miss Florence Werry and hem group had charge of the woship period. Mrs. I.G. E. Pritchard sang a much- enjoyed solo. Members of the congre- g-ation and fiends fmomn town gathemed ini St.Jo s Anglicýan C!h1urch on Sunday, to worshiDowt members of the asonic Lodg,,es of this district. Sehool System and - the teachers. <2) To do anything you must beat the system: to do th-is yoýu must be stu-bborn. (3 Learn history - read yester.dayý's paper but don't, believe aIl you ead in the Papler nor histo- r ookl.s, (4) Music is badiy taught -Wý1jecoud al le ara music if tagh ropexily, (P) Every ciid can iearn Mat.hematies if teteacher would take thýe time ta teach the subi ect, 1(6) Theme lis onily a hand- fui of teachers that inspire the students. (7) Believe your instincts not what the teacher tells you, you can or cannot know, ail the students get from the teacher is feed- back; mrost students are bomed ta death with this system, it stinks. (8) A -yI good - élever, student.F - is no good - so thi s student is not im- portant - "1we will fa11 him". (9) Opportunity Classes, are dumb classes - Nice word Opportunlty, rnuch better sounding than dumb,. 110) Teacher only likes students that make A marks -No time for other stu- dents. (11) Teacher seems to forget it's what the student wants to do, not the teach- er. (12) A student that needs help in the system: teacher gays - he is deficient and just lets him sit there. (13) Belausoa!teachers, students distmust their own feelings. (14) The taxpayer sends the student to sehool ta pass, not go the teacher can make a failure out of hîm. (35) The Credit System - wouid be fine if we could teachiers to mark positive- ly instead of negatively! What is go hard about phys- !cal education when stu- dents that should be inak-, ing 80% comes upwlth 60%; onesthat should make 60%7, are rnarked 26, 27, 36 - The Name 'of the Game R.R. 3, Cavan, Ont. March l8th, 1973. Dear Sir: 1 arn witing this letter ta .your paper in hopes that it will be printed. If only one persan reads it, and it rnakes any impression on them, it will be well worth my time. I am writing in concern for what is happening ta Minor Hockey. On Saturday night, March l7th, a gaine toak place in Newcastle between the Newcastle Pee Wees and the Millbrook Pee Wees. It was a deciding garne for the consolation trophy. The Millbrook tearn has neyer yet won. a game against Newcastle s0 there really was no need for panic. As a start the two teams have swea- ters alrnost the sanie color, and when this happens it is a rule the home team always has ta change. On ather occas- ions the Newcastle playens have always put white T-shirts on. When the assist- ant coach mentioned this ta one of the coaches in the box, he was tald where ta go in no un.certaïn terins. Theni the referees too ,ver-. It was the most superb display of mismanagernent I ever saw. One Mill- brook player> was given a penalty and he wasn't even on the ice. W,- en the 49 -YEARS-.GO T1hursday, April 3, 1924 T'he Fortieth Anniveroary or the Saivation Angny in ~Bomanville wffl be oh- served on Saturday evening and Sunday, April 12 and 13 in the Opera, fouse. Services wili be conducted by Brigadier -and Mns. Moore and the Oohawa Silv- er Band. The Merchant o« Venice was presented Ln t1he Opera Flouse on Thursday- and Friday by the Hi4h Sehool Literary Associatiton. The cast was as foilows: Duke of Venice, Robert B. Me- Cullough; Antonio, a Merch- ant of Venice, B. E. Ing- ham, M.A.; Bassania,_ Reid Pearn; Salanio, Clinton Cav- erly; Salarino, ditta, Ken- neth Switzer: Gratiano, Stuart James; Lorenzo, Ray- mond Cole- Shylock, Mat- -land Goulci; Tubai, Ernest. Roach, Launcelot Gobbo, Theo Martyn; Old Gobbo, Jessie McDougai; Portia, Marion Pickard; Nesissa, Jane Maon; Jessica, Doris Foster; Baît hesar, Dorothy Bonnycastie; Attendant ta Portia, Mildred S ouc h; Musician, Rub3e Se'weii; Pianist, Gwendolyn Wil- liams; Stage Manager, Cedi- rie Needhamn; Lantern OP- erator, Harold Neýedhani. D-urhami Holstein Club af- ficers for 1924 are as fol- ls:President W. Freda Failis, Miiibrook: V i c e, Archie Muir; Sec'y-Treas., L. C. Snowden; Sales Man- ager, R. R. Stevens. al a! Bowmanville. D i r etors: Noble 1. fMetcalf, J. D. Stev- ens, Bowmnanville; Arthur J. Runnals, Welcome: J,. T. Pearce, Port Hope; A. Arth- ur Gibson, Orono, Harry Jose, Newcastle; Harry Sey- mour, Ida; J. F. Belch, iMillbrook. The Hampton League wiil present 'IMartha Made Over" in the Methodist School Room on Monday, ýApril 14. Miss Margaret Grant, a 9tudent from Miss Coch- rane's Business 'Callege, Bowvmanville, lias complet- ed the neeessary require- mients la the advanced work for a stenographer. we do not want it. (A) Close ail sehools. (B) ýGet rid of teachers; who needs thein? Save the taxpayers' money, bring in the computera, let ail stu- dents learn at home 'by the computer system. (C) Computera do not cae how mnuch money stu- dent has - noa class distinc- --tion. (t» The comnputer doesk not vare if student is ugiy or pretty. (E) Teacher yells al stu- dlents, nat the computer. (F) Taxpayer does flot pay taxes to have his child downgraded and hurniliat- ed. (G) Teachers train etu- dents NOT ta tbink - they tell you what ta think - no student has been trained to give up. "You can't fali out of bed if you sleep on the floor".- (17) It should be made illegai ta ask about schol- ing, when iooking for a j6b - if you van do the jovb, why do you need'a diploma? (18) We can teach and learn ourseives - give us the'information, we wili iearn. Who needs te-achers .-we have been brainwash- ed into thinking we cannot learn without the teacher. (Not truc), lt's about time teachers experienced some of the same campetition for excel- lence that they keep ham- mering into students. The alienation ai increas- ing numlbers of young people îs convincng evidence of the need for radical reform in aur high schoois. Incmeasing numbers of students, often the bright- est and môst able - are ýbe- ing turfed out of school, and th-. Dimector of Education does not sec any rhyme or reason. lt is the obligation o! every Parent, Trustee, Edu- catar, Teacher, ta use Un- derstanding, Compassion, ta make students heaithier, happier, more successful human beings. captain ofthe teani argued with the. referee, he was immediateiy handed à' rnisconduct. Another Millbrook player was skating along after a Newcastle player, the referce banged in to hlm and knocked him down. The Newcastle player swung his stick at his head1 as he tried ta get on his feet, the referee grabbed hini, shook him, shoved him ta the other referee, who banged hlm against the boards, and shaved ,hlm into the penalty box. I have seen Nazis treat their prisoners better. Now, thi 's tough character they were mishandJ.ing is 12 years aid and must weigh. at least 100, pounds. I could go on and on, but I k-now this la going ta -be read as saur grapes, but if only one parent reads it and starts ta think, it will be a really blg success. I have only one mare thing ta add, these boys are aU il1 and 12 years of age, a very impressionable age, ta learn goad spartsm-anship, and I think bath teanis learned a lot last night. "It isn't how you play the game, but whether you wiîn or not". To the coach ofr this teani I say, "Carry your trophy in good heal1th, and look on it with pnlde.» A Concerned Hockey "Mothwe .Mrs. B. Henderson. j andi O Çistant (Pasi Frm fthe StatesmnFiles Phono 623-3303